Saturday, 28 March 2026

Pairs and singles

A male Blackcap ...


... and a female were in a scrubby patch near the Italian Garden ...


... and so were a male Chaffinch ...


... and his mate.


A male Greenfinch was singing in a treetop ...


... but this isn't his mate, as she was on the other side of the Long Water.


Singles included a Dunnock, which Ahmet Amerikali found in the hawthorn north of Peter Pan ...


... a Jay just up the path ...


... a male Great Spotted Woodpecker in a lime on the other side ...


... and a Jackdaw a few yards away.


A Chiffchaff behind the Lido paused from picking seeds out of alder fruit to have a song. Typically, it hopped around between phrases, making it hard to flim.



A Coal Tit was also here, feeding on the catkins of a black poplar. Most Coal Tits have a two-note song, but this has three.


A Blue Tit waited in a berberis at Mount Gate.


A pair of Mandarins preened on a rock in the little stream in the Dell.


The male Mute Swan at the Lido restaurant was preening on his nest, waiting for his mate to be ready.


The Canada Goose on the swans' nesting island in the Long Water was still holding her precarious nest.


A fox wandered through the grass on the west side of the lake.


A beetle crossed the path at the Vista. This is a Black Clock Beetle, Pterostichus madidus, also called a Rain Beetle, and there is a belief that if you kill one this makes it rain. Luckily it crossed to the other side unharmed.

3 comments:

  1. I presume the Canada Geese had eggs already for her to have been sitting like that when the swan attacked, but I didn't pick out any a

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  2. ...any apparent destruction of them by him. Do we take it they (substantially) survived the onslaught for her to resume sitting like that so soon? Jim

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    Replies
    1. It must be so, though I have no direct evidence as I haven't seen the female Canada standing up. The fact that she sits so persistently indicates that she does have intact eggs.

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